"Perhaps you've met Barth the intimidating theologian, but have you met Barth the pastor to pastors? Andrew Root introduces today's church to the Karl Barth it never knew, artfully putting this theologian in conversation with a church that is fearful about the future. Just what's needed by the church and its leaders right now--a lively theological dialogue between one of the church's greatest theologians and one of the church's most loving, faithful, bold leaders. If you are worried about the fate of your church (and who isn't these days?), this is a book you must read."
Will Willimon, professor of the practice of Christian ministry, Duke Divinity School; United Methodist bishop, retired; author of Aging: Growing Old in Church
"An engaging and creative work which draws us aside from the church's current crisis to plant us back in it with new vision and hope. I looked up from this book no longer feeling surprised by the crisis and my inability to solve it, no longer ashamed that I need the power of God to lead this church. I closed this book with a new imagination for what God can do in the crisis if we reach outside our own small efforts, over and over again. Andrew Root dares us to live and to lead as if God is actually alive and still cares about the world and the church."
Mandy Smith, pastor, St. Lucia Uniting Church, Brisbane, Australia; author of The Vulnerable Pastor and Unfettered: Imagining a Childlike Faith beyond the Baggage of Western Culture
"Churches and the Crisis of Decline is a marvelous achievement. Root argues that the principal challenge for the church in decline is not a loss of relevance or resources but the loss of a God who really is God. Root draws on the work of Karl Barth (the pastor), Charles Taylor, and Hartmut Rosa to identify the current captivity of the church to secular metrics. He proposes a way forward that waits on the hope that comes from outside of us and among us as one of us in Jesus Christ. Root's use of a possible-world story about a particular congregation shows his skill as a teacher and his hope for the church in concrete form. This is a must-read!"
Richard R. Topping, president and vice-chancellor, Vancouver School of Theology
"Andy Root is the guy in Matthew 25 with ten talents. He has been given a rare brain that can understand Charles Taylor and Karl Barth and explain them to others--the ministry of wisdom. He has also been given exceptional sight that notices and discerns where the church is, why we're here, and how we might find the next steps--the ministry of prophecy. But even more than that, he has been given a compassionate heart that cares about the state we are in, because of the impact this has on people--the ministry of the pastor. In this book, Andy has put his talents to work and gives us a great gift--this is theology that we need most vitally at this time. It's beautiful, applied, inspiring, kind, practical, deep, stretching, and, if we would only put it into practice, transforming. I don't know of another contemporary theologian who is continually serving up such applicable and helpful theology to the church."
Rev. Canon Chris Russell, Archbishop of Canterbury's Advisor for Evangelism and Witness
Andrew Root (PhD, Princeton Theological Seminary) is Carrie Olson Baalson Professor of Youth and Family Ministry at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is the author of more than twenty books, including Faith Formation in a Secular Age, The Pastor in a Secular Age, The Congregation in a Secular Age, Churches and the Crisis of Decline, The Church after Innovation, and The End of Youth Ministry? Root is also the coauthor (with Kenda Creasy Dean) of The Theological Turn in Youth Ministry. He is a frequent speaker and hosts the New Time Religion podcast.